Ahmadiyya and Secularism: Religious Persecution at Home Affects Endorsement for Secular Values in Canada

Ahmadiyya and Secularism: Religious Persecution at Home Affects Endorsement for Secular Values in Canada

Wilfrid Laurier University Scholars Commons @ Laurier Religion and Culture Major Research Papers 9-2020 Ahmadiyya and secularism: Religious persecution at home affects endorsement for secular values in Canada Rana Tanveer [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/rlc_mrp Part of the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Tanveer, Rana, "Ahmadiyya and secularism: Religious persecution at home affects endorsement for secular values in Canada" (2020). Religion and Culture Major Research Papers. 3. https://scholars.wlu.ca/rlc_mrp/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Religion and Culture Major Research Papers by an authorized administrator of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Ahmadiyya and secularism: Religious persecution at home affects endorsement for secular values in Canada Rana Tanveer Course Director: Dr. Jason Neelis Major Research Project submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Course RE98 MRP (spring) Master of Arts (Religion, Culture and Global Justice) Wilfrid Laurier University 2020 Rana Tanveer 2020 © Table of Contents Abstract 1 1 Introduction 2 1.1 Positionality 6 1.2 Methodology and Data Sources 7 2 Islam and secularism: Western view of Muslim homogeneity 8 3 Desecularisation and Ahmadiyya Exclusion in Pakistan 10 4 Religion, Secularism and Ahmadis in the Subcontinent 18 4.1 India 18 4.2 Bangladesh 21 5 Ahmadis arrive in Canada and make it home 24 6 Ahmadiyya religiosity and their move toward secularism 28 7 Conclusion 34 7.1 Ismailis 35 7.2 Alevis 36 8 Appendices 39 Appendix 1 39 Appendix 2 40-41 Appendix 3 42 Appendix 4 43 Appendix 5 44 Appendix 6 44 Appendix 7 45 Appendix 8 46 Appendix 9 47 Appendix 10 48 9 Bibliography 49 Abstract Contrary to the common notion that Muslims are fundamentalist, anti-modern, and against Western norms (hence their opposition to secularism), this paper argues that Muslims are not homogeneous. Therefore, their approach to secularism is not a matter of their assumed fixed religiosity. One recognises that, after seeing the Ahmadiyya Muslim community endorsing secular values in Canada, the assumption that Muslims coming to the West are anti-secular is misleading. The community’s persecution and loss of religious identity in Pakistan have moderated their approach toward secularism. To prove the hypothesis, Ahmadiyya teachings, addresses by living caliphs, and public statements from Ahmadiyya leaders are used to highlight changes in the community’s approaches toward secularism. The argument is based on the rise of Islamic nationalism in Pakistan, which excluded Ahmadis from the fold of Islam and placed them on the path of persecution. Brief comparative case studies of Alevis and Ismailis are included to strengthen the findings of this paper. Keywords: Muslims, Ahmadiyya, Ahmadis, homogeneous, heterogeneous, persecution, secularism, Pakistan, Canada, 1 1. Introduction Canada feels proud of having the highest number of foreign-born citizens than in any other Group of Eight (G8) countries. By opening doors to immigration and any persecuted communities across the world, Canada has created a society of mixed religions. It respects the religious and cultural values of diverse segments of its society, having the separation of state and religion at the core of its policy. Among multiple religions, Islam remains part of controversial debates about the extent to which Muslims endorse secular values. After 9/11, a community-based study of Canadian Muslim women reported anger and fear of a backlash, personal safety, and the future of their children in Canada. The participants raised concerns about their sense of belonging in Canada based on their religion. The Hérouxville Code of Conduct and statements of different Canadians before Consultation Commission on Accommodation Practices Related to Cultural Differences (Bouchard-Taylor Commission) in 2007 reflected the perception of the majority Canadians, who see Muslims as a challenge to secularism and gender equality, which are considered an integral part of “Quebec’s national identity” (Dawson and Bramadat 2014, 147-48). Liberal MP Iqra Khalid, an immigrant from Pakistan, introduced Motion 103 in 2016 for the condemnation of Islamophobia and a climate of fear and hate against Muslims. In response the motion, Iqra received over 50,000 emails, including highly offensive, Islamophobic, racist, threatening, and sexist comments (Zine, Chakroun, and Abbas 2019, 4). The perception of incompatibility of secular values with Muslim beliefs often becomes part of the discussion. Muslim beliefs are considered obstacles to their integration. 2 This controversial debate about Muslims in Canada aligns with the same debate taking place all over the West. Since 2001, there are calls from different quarters to limit multiculturalism in general and Islamic practices in particular for being ‘contrary’ to Western values. The French niqab ban in 2010, the U.S. ban on several Muslim-majority countries in 2017, and the Quebec ban on face coverings and religious symbols in 2017 and 2019 were steps taken by state institutions to bring some religious practices ‘in line with Western values’. Casanova (2007) points toward debates accusing Islam of being fundamentalist, anti-modern, and incompatible with democracy. These steps, like many others, reflect the concerns the West has over Muslims’ ‘inability’ to endorse secularism. Muslims are assumed to be homogeneous. Regardless of ethnicity, religious denomination, language, race, and culture, they are given one identity: Muslims. In this paper, I am challenging this notion of Muslims ‘homogeneity’. Rogers Brubaker’s observations is very useful here. He consider Muslims not as “a homogeneous and solidarity group”. Instead, he says, they are “a heterogeneous category” (Brubaker 2013, 6). It is misleading to consider Muslim immigrants as a single group, they have different ethnic backgrounds, religious denominations, economic conditions, cultures, and languages. Many Muslims in the West consider religiosity to be part of their identity, even many of them are irreligious. Their family background, sense of belonging, and social environment, among other things, can be reasons for this identity. Casanova finds that Muslims in North America are diverse as immigrants from South Asia, Arab countries, and West Africa are unable to transform into a single Muslim ummah (2007, 19). There are congregational segregations and doctrinal differences among them. If they do not mix with other types of Muslims, their degree of endorsement toward secular institutions cannot be alike. 3 In this paper, I intend to investigate the relationship between secularism and the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in Canada, which, over time, has established a presence in almost all major cities. This study aims to answer the question of whether identity loss and belonging to a religious persecuted community affect the degree of support of secularism. I will present findings of brief comparative studies on Alevis and Ismailis, both religious communities persecuted in their countries of origin, to support my argument. I base my argument on the rise of Islamic nationalism in Pakistan that excluded Ahmadis from the fold of Islam and put them on the course of persecution. I suggest that Ahmadis’ belonging to a persecuted religious community increases their support for secular institutions not only in their origin country but also in the country where they migrate to or take refuge in. I do not mean to challenge the general perception of the inverse relationship between religiosity and the support for secularism. I want to suggest that community- level religiosity can produce positive feelings toward secular values because of its belonging to a persecuted minority. I argue that victimized at the hands of religious setups and persecution on the basis of religion leads to endorse a secular view of institutions with the hope of protection. It is essential to mention that the focus of my study is on a part of the broader concept of secularism. To measure the approaches of three persecuted Muslim minorities, I have focused on the separation of state and religion, the freedom to practice religion, and the non-interference of the state in religious matters. Alfred Stepan defines this concept of secularism as “twin toleration”, where democratic institutions, as well as different religions, have sufficient place to exercise their freedom without interference in each other’s domain. In such a pattern, religious institutions neither have the constitutional prerogative to influence the functioning of democratically elected representatives, nor it can deny freedoms to any citizens (Stepan 2011, 114–16). Talal Asad takes this concept of twine toleration further and considers role of a democratic religion essential in 4 modern society. He finds democratic religion in consistence with modernity to promote public debate like in the US. Such religion plays a positive political role in democracy, but it becomes threatening if it enters political debate “on its own terms” like in Egypt and Iran (ibid 183, 185). This concept of twine toleration and interplay between secular setup and religion is what Jamaat- e-Ahmadiyya idealizes. Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the incumbent caliph of the Jamaat, in an interview in Toronto while defending Muslim Hijab and disapproving mixed-gatherings said: “The state

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